Improvement



CHARLES P. JANES.

improvement in Atomizers.

N0. 115,615. Patented lune 6 ,187l- AM I'NDTO-UTHMEAPNIC ((7v NY (08517814517 P1700535) UNITED S'mrns CHARLES P. JANES, OF BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS.

IMPROVEMENT m A'romizERs.

Specification forming part of Letters Patent No.'ll5,6l5, dated J one 6, 1871.

To allpersons to whom theseprcseats may some Be it known that 1, CHARLES P. J nuns, of Boston, of the county of Suffolk and State of Massachusetts, have invented an Improved Atomizer; and do hereby declare the same to be fully described in the following specification and represented in the accompanying drawing, of whichv Figure l is a front elevation, Fig. 2 a vertical section, Fig. 3 a top view, and Fig." 4 an end elevation of it.

In such drawing A denotes an elastic-bulb air-syringe, arranged in and supported by a furcated standard, B, extended down through a cork, C, of a bottle, 1). At one end the syringe has a jet-nozzle, a, and at the other it isprovidcd with a valve-case, 1), containing a disk-valve, c, the whole being so that, when the bulb, after being collapsed or compressed, may be in the act of expanding, air will be drawn into it through the valve-seat, and when the bulb is next compressed such air will be forced out of it through the nozzle to, and directly over the top of a jet-pipe, d, which forms part of the forked standard and is extended down into the bottle.

In carrying out my invention I combine withthe jet-pipe a small drip-cup, e, and a pipe, f, to lead therefrom down alongside of the jetpipe, so as to open into the bottle, the opening from the drip-cup into the conduit f being shown at g in Fig. 3.

It is well understood that when a stream of air is blown bythe air-syringe across the top of the jet-pipe a column of liquid from the bottle Will be raised through the jet-tube, and as it may be discharged therefrom will be broken up into fine spray or vapor.

More or less of the liquid will trickle down the outside of the jet-tube. The drip-cup and its conduit are to catch the surplus liquid and return it to the bottle.

The nozzle of the air-syringe is fastened to 'the drip-cup, the valvecase being secured to the branch is of the forked standard. This arrangement not only supports the air-syringe to better advantage than one standard fastened to its nose only willybut enables its bulb to be removed, as occasion may require, or a new one to be substituted.

The valve-case supporting-branch projects from the jet-tube, or it and the cup-conduit, in manner asshown, and with them forms the furcated standard.

I claim- 1. The arrangement of the drip-cup e and its conduit f with the jet-tube d and the airsyringe nozzle, as described.

2. In the improved atomizer, the arrangement of the valvecase b and nozzle (1 of the elastic bulb 'A, the branch is, the jet-pipe d,

the drip-cup e and its conduit f, all being sub- I stantially as specified and represented.

' CHARLES P. JANIES.

S. N. PIPER.

HEQE EB 

